Commonwealth v. Taylor's Exr.

147 A. 71, 297 Pa. 335, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 27, 1929
DocketAppeal, 8
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 147 A. 71 (Commonwealth v. Taylor's Exr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Taylor's Exr., 147 A. 71, 297 Pa. 335, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 416 (Pa. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Simpson,

Henry R. Taylor, a resident of the State of New York, died December 4, 1925,- owning a large number of shares of stock of Pennsylvania corporations. By section 1 of the Act of June 20, 1919, P. L. 521, a transfer inheritance tax is imposed upon the transfer of such shares by decedent’s estates. Under section 25 of the statute (P. L. 527), the auditor general appointed an official “to appraise the value of said property,” and, from his appraisement, defendant, the surviving executor of Taylor’s will, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, as authorized by section 27 of the act (P. L. 528). That court erroneously held that the appraisement was null and void and decreed that it should be set aside, whereupon the Commonwealth prosecuted the present appeal.

Prior to the passage of the statutes hereinafter referred to, testator’s estate would admittedly have been liable, under the Act of 1919, supra, but defendant avers they operate to relieve it from liability. The legislature of New York, by an act passed March 16, 1925, but to take effect July 1, 1925, (chapter 143, paragraph 9, of the Laws of New York for 1925, page 166) altered its theretofore existing law, which imposed the same transfer inheritance tax on estates of nonresident decedents as it did on those of resident decedents, by assessing the tax differently in the two classes of cases, and then provided, in the same statute, that “The taw imposed by this article in repect of personal property shall not be payable......if the laws of the state or territory of residence of the transferor at the time of the transfer contained a reciprocal provision under which nonresidents were exempted from transfer taxes or death taxes of every character in respect of personal property, providing the state or territory of residence of such nonresidents allowed a similar exemption to the state or territory of the residence of such transferor.” Following this, our Act of May 14, 1925, P. L. 717, 718, amended *339 section 1 of our Act of 1919, supra, by adding thereto a paragraph stating that “Personal property of a nonresident decedent made taxable under this section shall not be subject to the tax so imposed if a like exemption is made by the laws of the state or country of the decedent’s residence in favor of residents of this Commonwealth.”

If the New York Act of 1925, supra, had been valid, and the estates of Pennsylvania decedents had been exempted from liability, as seemingly therein provided, our Act of 1925, supra, would have relieved testator’s estate from the tax under consideration. Unfortunately, however, in Smith v. Laughman, 245 N. Y. 486, the Court of Appeals of New York decided that the amendatory provision of their statute resulted in a discrimination between estates of residents and those of nonresidents, in violation of so much of article IV, section 2, of the Constitution of the United States, as provides that “the citizens of each state shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states.” The court did not directly pass upon the reciprocal provision above quoted, because it was not necessary so to do; but, after stating (page 496) that “much has been said in argument” as to the two points standing or falling together, says that “We are not to whittle it [article IV, section 2, above quoted] down by refinement of exception, or by the implication of reciprocal advantage that is merely trivial or specious. The principle is put in jeopardy — there is set in it an entering wedge that may be the beginning of its destruction— if this statute is upheld.” The Supreme Court of the United States refused to allow a writ of certiorari to the judgment in this case: 275 U. S. 560.

As a result of that opinion, the acting attorney general of New York at once notified its State Tax Commission (which is its tax administrative tribunal) that the effect of the decision was to destroy the reciprocal provision of their statute, and required the collection, as had been done prior to 1925, of a stock transfer tax on es *340 tates of nonresidents, where the transfer had not already been made; and this opinion was followed until the passage of their Act of 1928, hereinafter referred to. In turn, the New York State Tax Commission notified the auditor general of this state of the decision in that case, of the opinion of their acting attorney general, and of their intention to follow it, whereupon the auditor general, believing that he was compelled thereto by our Act of 1925, supra, followed the same course, and collected for this State (and we still have in our treasury) more than a million dollars of transfer inheritance taxes, paid by the estates of New York decedents, who died between July 1, 1925, when their unconstitutional statute went into effect, and March 12, 1928, the effective date of their new statute, now to be cited.

By chapter 330, of the Laws of New York for 1928, page 825, 839, their legislature, on March 12, 1928, repealed so much of their Act of 1925, as caused it to be declared unconstitutional, and authorized a readjustment and refund of the transfer inheritance taxes collected from the estates of nonresident decedents ad interim, if their states made provisions to refund to the estates of New York decedents the like taxes collected by them during that time (section 11, page 838); but expressly declared, that otherwise “estates of decedents residents of such states dying during said period and prior to the time this act takes effect, shall not be entitled to reciprocal exemptions but shall be taxable under article 10-a of the tax law as enacted and made retroactive by this act.” We have passed no such reciprocal legislation; and hence New York retains the money already collected by it, and will continue to charge and enforce its stock transfer tax against the estates of Pennsylvania decedents who died between July 1, 1925, and March 12, 1928. If defendant’s contention as to the construction which should be placed on the New York Act of 1925 is the correct one, then their Act of 1928 is, in effect, an amendment to it, for the New York authori *341 ties, in the light of the above-quoted prohibitory provision in the latter act, would not be justified in refunding any money to the estates of Pennsylvania decedents, unless we made a like provision as to the estates of their decedents. For this reason, the New York State Tax Commission has announced that it will not do so unless we shall “refund any taxes which may have been collected from estates of residents of New York dying prior to said date, contrary to the reciprocal principle as made retroactive” by their Act of 1928. It follows that as our Act of 1925 only applies to states having valid reciprocal provisions, which New York has not, until and unless we comply with a condition, which we cannot now fulfil, our statute is not applicable to the existing situation, and defendant is not entitled to the reciprocity tendered thereby, its testator having died, as stated, on December 4, 1925.

The opinion of the court below, reaching an opposite conclusion, follows the reasoning of the Supreme Court of New York (a tribunal occupying, in their judicial system, the same situation as the courts of common pleas do in ours) in Farmers Loan & Trust Co. v. New York Central R. R. Co. (not officially reported), which decided that Smith v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 A. 71, 297 Pa. 335, 1929 Pa. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-taylors-exr-pa-1929.